The study found that men who did rate themselves at
increased risk of infection were more likely to be willing to use PrEP, but that
men 'objectively' at increased risk were no more likely than others to be
interested in using PrEP.

However, it remains possible that the 'objective' screening
tool used was not finely tuned enough to identify the men who would benefit
most from new methods of HIV prevention.

Numerous studies have investigated awareness and
acceptability of PrEP in various populations. For example, among HIV-negative
gay men, a
London survey found that half were likely or very likely to take PrEP.
Whereas younger men, previous users of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) and
recent sexual health clinic attendees were more likely to be interested in
using PrEP, men’s actual sexual behaviour did not predict willingness to use
it.

An
Australian study found that the majority of gay men were cautious about
using PrEP, with 28% willing to use it. In contrast to the London study, those interested
in taking PrEP were more likely to have recently had unprotected anal sex with
casual partners and to have had more than ten partners in the past six months. As
in London, they were also more likely to have taken PEP.

The Australian researchers also asked respondents, ‘How
likely do you think it is you will become HIV-positive?’ (a question that has
been included in very few other studies). The vast majority thought themselves
unlikely to acquire HIV, with just 3.5% saying that it was likely or very
likely. However, those who did think it likely were almost five times more
likely than others to be willing to use PrEP.

The new study from Canada further explores men’s perception
of risk. This is likely to be a significant issue in the uptake of PrEP, which so
far has been slow. Taking PrEP each day requires men to anticipate that
they will need extra protection from HIV, but with condoms frequently presented
as being 100% effective and with non-condom use highly stigmatised in certain
contexts, acknowledging that risk may be challenging for some individuals.

The researchers think that people who will adhere to PrEP need more than willingness – they also need to perceive themselves at risk of infection

The investigators recruited 423 men who have sex with men (MSM) at
a downtown Toronto sexual health clinic. Average age was 30 and most were
well-educated.

Overall, acceptability of PrEP was high, with 49.7% saying
that they would be willing to take it as a daily tablet.

However, the researchers judged that people who will really
take and adhere to PrEP need more than willingness – they also need to perceive
themselves at risk of infection.

When asked about this,
17.0% of men thought that there was ‘more than a little risk’ or ‘a lot of
risk’ that they would acquire HIV. Amongst this group, willingness to use PrEP
was high, with three-quarters saying that they were willing. Indeed, in
multivariate analysis, willingness to use PrEP was associated with this
‘subjective’ assessment of risk.

But far more men who were willing to use PrEP did not consider themselves at increased
risk of infection (156 men, 36.9% of the whole sample) than did see themselves
at increased risk (54 men, 12.8%).

And the researchers were also interested in ‘objective’
assessments of risk. There are few screening tools which clinicians can use to
identify those at increased risk of infection, but the Centers for Disease
Prevention and Control (CDC) have developed one for men who have sex with men, known
as HIRI-MSM, which the Canadian researchers used.

Based on analysis of the risk factors for incident HIV
infection in two large cohorts of American gay men in the late 1990s (Project
Explore and VAXGEN 004), HIRI-MSM asks seven questions about age, partner
numbers, receptive and insertive anal sex, HIV-positive partners and drug use.
Men scoring 10 or more on the tool should, according to the CDC, have a more
in-depth assessment of their sexual behaviour – this will allow clinicians to
make decisions about provision of PrEP and other HIV prevention interventions.

However, the use the Canadian researchers made of the tool is
slightly different. Men scoring 10 or more were simply defined as ‘objectively’
having high risk for HIV and therefore as eligible for PrEP.

And most of the men in this cohort of sexual health clinic
attendees were at high risk by this reckoning – 77.1% scored over 10.

Is the ‘objective’ measure of risk used in this study the most appropriate one?

But in the statistical analysis, men ‘objectively’ rated as
at increased risk of infection were no more likely than other men to be willing
to use PrEP (whereas 'subjective' risk had been associated with willingness).

So, whereas one-in-seven of the men consider themselves at
increased risk of infection (‘subjective’ assessment), the researchers considered
three-quarters to be so (‘objective’ assessment).

Looking only at one quarter of the sample, those men with the
highest HIRI-MSM scores (the top quartile), just 26.2% rated themselves at
increased risk of infection. Similarly, of the one-in-ten men with the highest
scores (the top decile), 27.3% thought themselves at elevated risk.

And just 46 of the participants (10.9%) satisfied all three
of the following conditions – (a) willing to use PrEP, (b) subjective higher
HIV risk, and (c) objective higher HIV risk. “This disconnect between objective and perceived HIV risk may pose a
challenge when assessing individuals for PrEP,” say the researchers.

More work is
needed to develop appropriate ways of identifying individuals who would benefit
from PrEP. Within this, it is worth asking:

Is the ‘subjective’ measure of risk used in this
study the most appropriate one? It is challenging for individuals to describe
themselves as ‘likely’ to become HIV positive, and it is not certain that people
who do not do so are unwilling to take steps to avoid infection.

Is the ‘objective’ measure of risk the most
appropriate? While HIRI-MSM is rigorously based on incidence data, the cut-off
score of 10 may be too low to only identify
those at highest risk of seroconversion. In fact, any man reporting receptive
anal sex instantly scores 10 (regardless of condom use or partner numbers),
while men aged 18 to 28 have 8 points added to their score. The tool may be
best used to exclude individuals who don’t need further assessment (99.5% of
those with a score below 10 did not acquire HIV in the next six months), rather
than as a tool to identify those at the highest risk (1.9% of those with a score
above 10 did acquire HIV in the next six months).

Smith DK et al. Development of a Clinical Screening Index Predictive of Incident HIV Infection Among Men Who Have Sex With Men in the United States. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes 60: 421-427, 2012.

NAM’s information is intended to support, rather than replace, consultation with a healthcare professional. Talk to your doctor or another member of your healthcare team for advice tailored to your situation.